In Cecil Beaton’s glittering world, everyone was dressed up with somewhere to go.
In the 1970s, Meadow Muska documented the feminist collectives that offered a new definition of home for hundreds of women.
A new exhibition reveals how Lange’s concern for the dispossessed has never been more relevant.
In a biennial and two recent photobooks, artists consider the postcolonial African subject through intriguingly intimate images.
A new book revisits W.E.B. Du Bois’s landmark 1900 exhibition on Black American identity.
For TIME magazine’s editor at large, photography is about speaking truth to the world.
Nan Goldin, Alec Soth, Jamel Shabazz, and others share the music that comforts, inspires, or makes them move.
Through photographs, historical documents, and recent interviews, Laia Abril presents the case that abortion is here to stay, whether it’s legal or not.
With museums and galleries closed, the touch-screen world is the only one we have.
The LA-based artist speaks about the process of editing—and the role that bookmaking has played in the evolution of his work.
Three artists confront how COVID-19 has changed their lives and work—and how they see the world.
What does an exhibition about Mexico’s response to the HIV epidemic reveal about the connections between art and public health?
Beyond the tear gas and the front lines, these Hong Kong photographers have found new ways to represent the city’s political crisis.
In his 1970s photographs from Colorado, Robert Adams finds the beauty and emotion in everyday homes.
Fumi Ishino’s photographs ask what happens when a house becomes unfamiliar.
For more than a decade, Alejandro Cartagena has photographed Mexican suburbs transformed by the rapid construction of new homes.
When should you bring a photographic project to an end?
For the acclaimed architect, photography has always been a central approach to design.
Aperture presents “Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI,” a timely and urgent issue that explores how artificial intelligence is quickly transforming the field of photography and our broader culture of images.